Friday, August 04, 2017

A Strange Beautiful Excitement


Amazing find of the published story ‘His Little Friend’ by the author of A Strange Beautiful Excitement seven years earlier than the publication of ‘Vignettes’ in the Native Companion (Melbourne) in 1907, previously thought to be her earliest story published outside school magazines.

The discovery of the story ‘His Little Friend’ is at the heart of a new book on the life of the young Katherine Mansfield by Wellington author and historian Redmer Yska, who made the find while researching in the archives of the Wellington City Library.

Previously unknown to Mansfield’s modern readers and scholars, the short story, by the 11-year old Kathleen M. Beauchamp (her given name), was published on the Children’s Page of the New Zealand Graphic on 13 October 1900. It is reprinted in full in Yska’s new book, A Strange Beautiful Excitement: Katherine Mansfield’s Wellington 1888–1903, published by Otago University Press.

Yska describes the story, about the friendship between a lonely, elderly man and an impoverished child, as showing the young Mansfield ‘grappling with harsh, bleak truths at a young age, paving the way for much of what was to come’. The literary discoveries didn’t end there: Yska also found in the Graphic the writer’s first two known published letters.

A Strange Beautiful Excitement works to locate Mansfield in the rickety colonial capital of the 1890s; the sights, sounds and smells of her Thorndon and Karori childhood.

 “Kiwis tend to see Katherine Mansfield as a grown woman in her twenties, the vamp with the bob and the faraway eyes. She’s always in London: bookish, cosmopolitan, swallowed up in a cloud of Bloomsbury cigarette smoke,” Yska says.
“That’s in part because most of her biographers (mainly British) think the story really starts when she leaves Wellington. So that crucial, formative part of her life gets a few pages or a chapter at most.”

Yska notes that Mansfield spent nearly half of her 34 years in the city. And even after she left, she never stopped writing about it. Her most luminous stories are set in this raw, wind-bashed city with its ‘singular charm and barrenness’.

“I have tried to bring her back home, underline her physical presence. I show her as a vigorous youngster striding through the gale, long curly hair flying. I’ve tried to find the ‘human story’ of her adolescence, her living footsteps. I’ve tried to catch a glimpse of her in the open air, to make her live, move, talk.”

Described by Fiona Kidman as a ‘ravishing, immersing read’, A Strange Beautiful Excitement is a ‘wild ride’ through the Wellington of Mansfield’s childhood. This handsome hardback edition features a number of evocative photographs and illustrations.

A Strange Beautiful Excitement
Redmer Yska
9780947522544
$39.95
Hardback
Otago University Press
3 August 2017

Katherine Mansfield’s Wellington told in a vivid, mesmerising, original book

How does a city make a writer?

Described by Fiona Kidman as a ‘ravishing, immersing read’, A Strange Beautiful Excitement is a ‘wild ride’ through the Wellington of Katherine Mansfield’s childhood.

From the grubby, wind-blasted streets of Thorndon to the hushed green valley of Karori, author  Redmer Yska, himself raised in Karori, retraces Mansfield’s old ground: the sights, sounds and smells of the rickety colonial capital, as experienced by the budding writer.

Along the way his encounters and dogged research – into her Beauchamp ancestry, the social landscape, the festering, deadly surroundings – lead him (and us) to reevaluate long-held conclusions about the writer’s shaping years. They also lead to a thrilling discovery.

This haunting and beautifully vivid book combines fact and fiction, biography and memoir, as Yska rediscovers Mansfield’s Wellington, unearthing her childhood as he goes, shining a new lamp on old territory.

It’s not enough to say I immensely enjoyed A Strange Beautiful Excitement...it’s simply splendid. – Dame Fiona Kidman

the best account I have ever read of Wellington and Karori as they were in Mansfield’s day ... vivid and vigorous, it is a pleasure to read.  – Kathleen Jones, KM biographer

Redmer Yska is a Wellington-born writer and historian. He has published books about postwar teenagers (‘bodgies and widgies’), Dutch New Zealanders like himself, and a commissioned history of Wellington City. He was awarded the National Library Research Fellowship to write a history of NZ Truth, published in 2010. Yska was the major recipient of a New Zealand History Research Trust Fund Award in 2014, allowing him to write this book.

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